Monday, 19 March 2018

Black Powder - Marengo

This battle is lost, but there is time to win another.

General Desaix to First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte, Marengo, early evening, 13th June 1800

This Thursday at the Uni, 5 veteran Napoleonic's players got together to refight the Battle of Marengo using Black Powder rules. I was anxious to see how Austrians would fare under the demanding command and control mechanics of Black Powder - I am facing a mutiny from the Austrian players in my Wagram mega game project for insisting on giving Austrian brigade commanders low Staff Ratings - do they have a fair gripe, were they actually dashing and aggressive, like the Archduke Charles, or has history been fair for once in portraying them as quite pedestrian, at least compared to their French counterparts?

The Commanders: (L-R) Caesar as Desaix, Peter as Melas, Bryan as Ott, David as 1st Consul. (Ian, as Lannes, has been recalled....)

Marengo
is a fascinating battle in its own right, not least because it was rewritten by Napoleon no less
than three times, each account successively reducing the contribution of Desaix
and Kellerman, Napoleon’s political rivals. Desaix, of course, conveniently
fell in this battle, just at his moment of triumph.

The Marengo Campaign began with French
columns doing a Hannibal over the Alps, converging on the plains of Northern
Italy to surprise the Austrians. Napoleon had used daring strategic manoeuvre to
unite French forces but the Austrian armies still had to be defeated on the
field.

Napoleon’s opponent, General der Kavallerie Michael Friedrich von Melas, recalled to the Colours, was indeed a competent and tough general, having defeated several French armies the previous year. French victory in the
1800 campaign was not a foregone conclusion – Napoleon was staring defeat in
the face until Desaix turned up in the nick of time, despite most of Napoleon’s
increasingly desperate despatches recalling him being intercepted by rampaging Austrian
cavalry.

The scenario, heavily adapted from the one in Wargames Illustrated 233, conflates both the Austrian
assaults on the village of Marengo on the 14th June beginning at
about 11 AM, and Desaix’s subsequent arrival 6 hours later, and so wildly
distorted both time and space, in order to bring out what, to me, were the key aspects of the battle: the Austrian break into Marengo, and the French counter attacks towards evening....

At the start of our scenario, the battle had been going on most of the
morning and the Austrians have pushed back the French over the bridge to the very edge of
Marengo itself. The French are trying to form a defensive line based on the village
and the Fontanone River….

Bryan, on the Austrian left flank, pushes forward aggressively with the intent of intercepting or at least delaying French reinforcements...

His French opposite number, Ian, playing Lannes's currently tiny vanguard, is sufficiently impressed to pull right back...

And opposite Marengo, Peter manoeuvres methodically with balletic precision around the town.

But perhaps too methodically - despite Bryan's deep lunge across the table, French reinforcements appear on the road to Marengo...

However, to this point, the Austrian staff ratings have not slowed them down too much - with all regular units rated as Superbly Drilled, they still got a move on a failed order...

With the French heavy cavalry reserve now appearing in the distance, Peter resorts to desperate measures...

Having shot up the French squares covering the approaches to Marengo with artillery until they are shaken, he charges with well supported cavalry - all that parade ground precision was for good reason - the square is broken!

And in the final move of the game, manages to put in fully supported assaults on two faces of the town, thus splitting the Garrison's defence...

And snatches a victory by taking the town before Desaix's reinforcements can save the day!

I would just add that to get a better tactical appreciation of the battle, put the village on the northern side-road by the junction - the big problem the Austrians had was getting shot up between the "bridge" and the village.

All will be revealed in late June when Terry Crowdy's book is published

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Recently retired from the Royal Navy after 22 years service in all ranks and rates from Ordinary Seaman to Lieutenant. Now an international man of mystery? (Well, mystified by the world of International Higher Education, at any rate!)